Cuban political prisoner who refused exile is freed

Arnaldo Ramos told Reuters yesterday that he was in good  shape after more than seven years in prison and planned to  resume his opposition to the communist-led government.

“I am in perfectly good condition and very happy to be  home,” said the 68-year-old economist, who was released and  allowed to return to his Havana home on Saturday night. “I’m  going to return to the same activities I did before.”

He went on Sunday to the weekly protest march of the  dissident group “Ladies in White”, where he posed for pictures  beside leader Laura Pollan.

He told reporters Cuba must open its state-controlled  economy to get out of its current “stagnation” and that planned  reforms by President Raul Castro to cut government workers and  expand the private sector were insufficient.

“Cuba will go from stagnation to chaos if there is no real  opening, at least for the economy,” the slight, soft-spoken  Ramos said.

He was one of 75 dissidents arrested in a 2003 crackdown on  government opponents and one of the last remaining in jail,  serving an 18-year prison sentence.